Chapter 3
Education and Training portfolio
3.1
This chapter summarises certain key areas of interest raised during the
committee's consideration of budget estimates for the 2017-18 financial year
for the Education and Training portfolio.
3.2
On 31 May and 1 June 2017, the committee heard evidence from Senator the
Hon. Simon Birmingham, Minister for Education and Training, along with officers
from the Department of Education and Training (the Department) and agencies
responsible for administering education and training policy, including:
-
Australian Research Council (ARC)
-
Australian Skills Quality Authority (ASQA);
-
Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency (TEQSA); and
-
Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership (AITSL).
Australian Research Council
3.3
Ms Leanne Harvey, Acting Executive General Officer, advised the
committee that a new CEO is due to start in July. The committee congratulated
Ms Harvey's performance in her temporary role.[1]
3.4
Committee members enquired about the status of the Australian Code
for the Responsible Conduct of Research. Ms Harvey confirmed that there was
a review of the code underway.[2]
There was discussion of the removal of the definition of research misconduct
from the code and the reasoning behind this decision.[3]
3.5
The number of new matters of actual or potential research integrity
breaches or misconduct was sought by the committee. Ms Harvey informed the
committee that eleven new matters were notified in 2016.[4]
Ms Kylie Emery, Acting General Manager, noted that these matters mostly
related to authorship disputes, peer assessment processes and plagiarism.[5]
Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency
3.6
Committee members questioned Professor Nicholas Saunders, Chief
Commissioner, about the operational challenges facing the agency. Professor
Saunders advised that the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency (TEQSA)
had faced two major challenges over the past five years: the major review which
resulted in a reduction of funding; and an increase in prospective providers in
the VET industry.[6]
3.7
TESQA was asked about its staffing arrangements, particularly in
relation to temporary staffing contracts. Mr Elmer Wiegold, Director,
advised that the agency spent approximately $1.3 million on contract staff
and external experts in the 2015-16 financial year. He further noted that the
agency has had a significant reduction in APS staff, dropping from 100 in 2014-15
to 48 currently.[7]
Australian Skills and Quality Authority
3.8
Mr Mark Paterson, Chief Commissioner, was asked whether RTO compliance
rates stated in the Australian Skills and Quality Authority (ASQA) 2015-16
annual report remained current. He confirmed that this was the case, stating
that RTOs being audited had low rates of compliance during the initial auditing
phase, and noted that rates of non-compliance had increased due to ASQA's shift
towards a 'risk-based system of regulation'.[8]
3.9
The committee enquired about the collapse of training provider the Sage
Institute. Mr Paterson informed the committee that, due to Sage's lack of
electronic filing practices, it had provided ASQA with 2500 boxes of hard copy
student notes, equivalent to about 3½ semi-trailer loads of paper records,
which was causing significant delays in assessment.[9]
The committee asked why Sage had not been identified as at risk of collapse
during earlier audits:
Mr Paterson: Our assessment and our audit processes
do not—and we do not have a remit to enable us to—examine with precision the
financial standing of an organisation at the point in time like that.
Senator CAMERON: So who does? Would that be ASIC?
Mr Paterson: I do not think anybody other than the
shareholders have a very clear idea. There are reporting obligations that exist
for corporations. Not all of these RTOs are corporations; some of them are
partnerships; the smaller ones can be sole traders. They are not all
proprietary limited companies. They can be owned by offshore entities. They can
be owned by onshore entities. We do not have an opportunity to examine in that
detail to be able to assess imminent collapse.[10]
3.10
Information was also sought in relation to the number of high-risk
providers which had been identified for audit. Professor Michael Lavarch,
Commissioner, advised that 'something like 1300 audits are currently scheduled,
currently being undertaken or are in the process of being finalised'.[11]
These audits were noted to be a combination of those 'triggered by
applications, those which are triggered by risk factors and those which are
follow-up audits as a result of evidence reviews, AAT proceedings and the
like'.[12]
Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership
3.11
The committee enquired into the implementation of the Australian
Professional Standards for Principals. Ms Lisa Rodgers, Chief Executive
Officer, expanded on information that had been previously provided in a
question on notice from the March 2017 hearings. Ms Rodgers noted that the
AITSL runs a stakeholder survey in which they analyse principals' awareness of
the standards, and also operate the School Leader Self-Assessment Tool to
measure principals' compliance with the standards.[13]
She further advised that AITSL would monitor the standards from 2018, in
addition to reviewing them as needed.[14]
3.12
Information was sought regarding the newly released My Induction app.
Ms Rodgers advised that the app was designed to 'provide induction and
support for beginning teachers...'[15]
In addition to in-app resources and tools, the app also connected beginning
teachers with highly accomplished and leading teachers.[16]
Department of Education
Cross-portfolio
3.13
The committee enquired into the funding of the Healthy Harold program
run by Life Education Australia. The Minister advised that a budget submission
for the Healthy Harold program had been submitted to the Department of Health,
not the Department of Education and Training. Life Education had been contacted
shortly after the Minister became aware of the situation, and were meeting with
department officials within the next week to confirm ongoing funding
arrangements.[17]
Outcome One
3.14
There was an exchange between the committee and the Department in
relation to the online school funding estimate calculator. Of particular
interest was the way that data was represented in the calculator, namely the
calculator's 2017 'starting point'. Mr Tony Cook PSM, Associate
Secretary, Schools and Youth, noted that the calculations represented in these
figures were based on amendments to the Act that are currently before the
Parliament.[18]
3.15
The committee also enquired into the 'common share' approach adopted in
the new school funding model. The Minister advised the committee:
Over a 10-year transition period we are transitioning to more
balanced funding rates, in fact balanced funding rates that will treat each of
the states equally and each of the non-government sectors equally. In terms of
assuming a greater role in relation to government schools, we are transitioning
from an average 17 per cent contribution to the Schooling Resource Standard up
to 20 per cent contribution of the Schooling Resource Standard... You do not have
to go back too far to when the Australian government's contribution to state
government schools was in the single digit territory. It is come up to 17 per
cent, and we are proposing to take it, with a greater role, to 20 per cent
balanced equally across the states and territories.[19]
3.16
The Minister further noted that the legislation proposed by the
Government would provide 'certainty and stability' in relation to school
funding for the program's ten-year life.[20]
3.17
Information was sought regarding bullying in schools. Dr Michele
Bruniges, Secretary, noted that state and territory governments are ultimately
responsible for their schooling systems and thus the Commonwealth had limited
capacity to address the issues. However, she also advised that broad frameworks
exist in relation to child protection, which are then enforced on a state
level. State-based mandatory reporting schemes were also noted as a method of
addressing bullying issues.[21]
Outcome Two
3.18
The committee asked for an update regarding the Ford Transition Project.
Dr Subho Banerjee, Deputy Secretary, Skills and Training, advised that the
Federal Government had worked with Ford and other stakeholders to 'support the
transition to new employment opportunities for up to 1500 workers from
Ford and the component manufacturing supply chain'.[22]
Dr Banerjee further noted that after Ford's closure in October 2016, the
project focussed on providing support services through outreach centres in
Geelong and Broadmeadows, which was concluded in April 2017.[23]
3.19
The committee examined the funding arrangements to the university sector
announced in the 2017-18 Budget. The Minister advised that the measures
outlined in the budget would result in $1.8 billion saved over the forward
estimates in fiscal balance terms.[24]
Minister Birmingham also advised the committee that a recent Parliamentary
Budget Office (PBO) report had indicated that:
...the very steady level of higher education grants, that even
with the government's reforms, will continue to flow into the education sector.
In fact, [the PBO] seem to indicate a level of grants higher than that which
had previously been forecast under previous budget statements, showing that
there is good strong funding available for universities into the future.[25]
3.20
The committee enquired into the efficiency dividend proposed to be
applied to universities, asking what kinds of analysis the Department had
taken, whether it had modelled the impact on individual universities.[26]
Mr David Learmonth, Deputy Secretary, Higher Education, Research and
International, stated that universities would respond individually to the
application of the efficiency dividend. He also gave several specific examples
where universities had achieved significant efficiencies, in the order of
$40–50 million per annum, through the introduction of an integrated
professional services delivery model or improved internal efficiencies in
corporate IT finance systems.[27]
He also pointed out that in 2015 the university sector spent more than a
quarter of a billion dollars on advertising and marketing, suggesting this as
another area for efficiency gains.[28]
3.21
There was also discussion about the policy to lower the HECS/HELP
repayment income threshold. Mr Learmonth advised that the lowering of the
threshold would affect 180 000 people with HECS/HELP debts, noting that
this figure includes 'people who would not otherwise have paid but for the
reduction in threshold, and people who would have paid but would have paid
less'.[29]
3.22
The committee asked the Department why $42 000 was settled upon as
the threshold for repayments. The Minister explained how this figure was
determined:
We have looked at the growing rate of debt expected to not be
repaid, we have looked at the scale of growth overall of the HELP loan scheme,
we have looked at international comparisons of repayments around student loans,
we went through a long process that was very open and in a discussion paper
that we released ahead of last year's budget and submissions were being
received, and during the election campaign last year we openly canvassed
options for lowering of the repayment threshold for the HELP scheme. We also
openly canvassed the setting of new or different repayment rates. In the end
the judgement was made that setting a new level at $42,000, some 20 per cent or
thereabouts above the minimum wage and well above international comparisons
such as repayment rates in New Zealand or the United Kingdom, was a way to deal
with the problem of debt not being repaid, to ensure the long-term
sustainability of the HELP scheme that underpins access to university education
without Australians facing any up-front fees, and to do all that in a way that
was carefully calibrated with more even steps in the application of those HELP
repayment levels that had historically been the case for a new lower repayment
rate, which as we have said equates to about $8 per week of repayments compared
to the much higher starting level under the current arrangements, and at the
other end of the spectrum some increased levels of repayment rates for
graduates earning higher incomes to ensure that they too are being asked to
make a contribution to repay debts a little faster.[30]
3.23
The Department was also asked whether it had specifically considered the
impact on female graduates. Mr Learmonth noted that the proportion of female
graduates comprises of sixty per cent of the total number of completing
students, and advised that overall the measure 'will impact on any individual
according to their earnings'.[31]
3.24
There was discussion about whether the proposed threshold would affect
high education enrolments. Mr Learmonth noted that domestic and international
evidence indicates that a lowered repayment threshold has no effect on demand
for higher education enrolments.[32]
The Minister further noted:
Evidence in Australia and overseas shows that where there is
access to a student loan program of this nature, particularly an
income-contingent student loan program but even frankly others that do not have
the income-contingent generosity of HELP, there is not a real barrier to entry
created at all. In fact, people become, if anything, less sensitive to the price
of their studies and simply assess the benefit or otherwise of undertaking that
degree. On the anecdotal example you gave before, we do not want people to be
deterred from studying because of the way in which loan schemes occur, but we
are confident the evidence is there that shows they will not be deterred from
studying due to the structure of the loan scheme.[33]
3.25
The Minister further noted that the Federal Government recommended that
students consider a range of pathways to make an informed choice about their
career options.[34]
3.26
The committee enquired into the Skilling Australians Fund, asking the
Department whether employers with turnover of less than $10 million per
annum will be required to contribute to the fund each year that the visa is
valid. Dr Banerjee stated that temporary visas will attract the payment
yearly, and permanent visas will have a higher flat rate applied.[35]
Mr Bryan Palmer, Group Manager, Skills Market, further noted that the fund
would supply $88.8 million in 2017-18, increasing to almost $400 million
in the forward estimates.[36]
The Minister stated that the modelling of these funding estimates had been
prepared with the Department of Immigration and Border Protection and the
Department of the Treasury, and that the Government 'has confidence in the
revenue forecasts'.[37]
3.27
An update was also sought by the committee on the Adult Migrant English
Program (AMEP). Mr Brendan Morling, Group Manager, Skills Programs, advised
that AMEP's estimated funding for 2016-17 is $279 million and around $300 million
over the forward estimates. He further noted that the number of students in
AMEP in 2016‑17 is expected to amount to 63 733.[38]
Senator Bridget
McKenzie
Chair
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